Huge problem on hydraulic lifts

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on calculating the required air pressure to lift a car using a hydraulic lift system with two pistons of different diameters. The main equation used is DeltaF = pg(A1 + A2)h, where p is the oil density (900 kg/m³) and h is the height (2.0 m). The user initially attempted to derive the solution using a different approach, leading to an incorrect force calculation of 49.92 N, while the correct answer is 920 N. The confusion arises from the need to account for the weight of the oil column in the calculations.

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Homework Statement


the hydraulic lift at a car repair shop is filled with oil. the car rests on a 25cm diameter piston. to lift the car, compressed air is used to push down on a 6cm diameterpiston. By how much must the air pressure force b eincreased to life the car 2.0m.


Homework Equations


DeltaF = pg(A1+A2)h where p is the density (900 for oil) and h is the height


The Attempt at a Solution


please read this: I didnt use the above equation because it was just stated in the textbook with no logic, so i used another equation derived from the logic of previous pages. We know F1/A1 = F2/A2 to keep the car up without lifting it a certain height, and to lift it a certain height, the equation is F1/A1 = F2/A2 + pgh where p is density and h is height. these equation are given in the textbook as well and they make sense. so to find the change in pressure, don't you just arrange the two equations for F1 and subtract them? Why is this wrong!
 
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You have effectively increased the load by the weight of the column of oil.
You know that the pressure in both pistons must be the same
 
mgb_phys said:
You have effectively increased the load by the weight of the column of oil.
You know that the pressure in both pistons must be the same

I have not effectively done this because my answer is incorrect! the answer using their equation of DeltaF=pg(A1 + A2)h yeilds 920N while mine yields a MUCH smaller number. can you tell me how my approach is effective?
 
Isn't it just the pressure at the bottom of the extra oil column?
Pressure in a column of incompressible liquid = \rho g h
= 900 kg/m^3 * 9.8 m/s^2 * 2m = 17 640 kg/m/s^2 = 17.6kPa
 
mgb_phys said:
Isn't it just the pressure at the bottom of the extra oil column?
Pressure in a column of incompressible liquid = \rho g h
= 900 kg/m^3 * 9.8 m/s^2 * 2m = 17 640 kg/m/s^2 = 17.6kPa

yea that is what i got and i multiplied it by the area of the force pushed to get the change in the force. its not working and i am yielding a change of 49.9212N as you would be as well. the answer given is 920N! please help! my exam in in a couple hours!
 
Not sure what that means - "air pressure force" isn't very clear.
The force to lift the liquid is, mass * g = rho g h * area
900 kg/m^3 9.8 * 2 * 0.125m^2 pi = 865.9N

If you used the sum of the areas
900 kg/m^3 9.8 * 2 * (0.125m^2 pi + 0.03m^2 pi) = 917N but I don't see how this is justified.
 

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